
Guiria
Senior Audioholic
I've got some in-laws wanting to upgrade to 7.1 and I am putting together their system. I told them I should build their sub to which they obliged and so it begins.
Their needs are something small and not too powerful since they live in a 4-plex.
My initial thoughts are a 10" driver such as the
CSS SDX10
Dayton HF 10
Dayton Titanic 10
And use the Bash 300 watt amp for power. The total budget for the sub is 500 dollars. That price needs to include driver, amp, wood, finishing materials, hardware, everything.
All the drivers are tuned in the mid 20's.
In Winisd it seems the Dayton HF and the SDX10 are very close in performance, however they both exceed xmax with 300 watts around 20 Hz.
I have included a 2nd order highpass filter at 18 Hz in Winisd to simulate the filter on the amp. That's a design concern right there. Both of these boxes are above 2 cubic feet which is getting too big.
If I forget Winisd and follow the manufacturer specs the SDX10 only needs 43 liters or 1.5 cubic feet. So I'd say the SDX10 is still in the running.
The Titanic 10" doesn't have the flattest response, nor is it the loudest (by 1 db simulated which probably means no difference in the real world) but it stays within xmax and also has the smallest footprint. I'm inclined to go the titanic route. It's box is also around 1.5 cubic feet which is more inline with the space I have to work with.
Comments, thoughts, suggestions are welcome.
Their needs are something small and not too powerful since they live in a 4-plex.
My initial thoughts are a 10" driver such as the
CSS SDX10
Dayton HF 10
Dayton Titanic 10
And use the Bash 300 watt amp for power. The total budget for the sub is 500 dollars. That price needs to include driver, amp, wood, finishing materials, hardware, everything.
All the drivers are tuned in the mid 20's.
In Winisd it seems the Dayton HF and the SDX10 are very close in performance, however they both exceed xmax with 300 watts around 20 Hz.
I have included a 2nd order highpass filter at 18 Hz in Winisd to simulate the filter on the amp. That's a design concern right there. Both of these boxes are above 2 cubic feet which is getting too big.
If I forget Winisd and follow the manufacturer specs the SDX10 only needs 43 liters or 1.5 cubic feet. So I'd say the SDX10 is still in the running.
The Titanic 10" doesn't have the flattest response, nor is it the loudest (by 1 db simulated which probably means no difference in the real world) but it stays within xmax and also has the smallest footprint. I'm inclined to go the titanic route. It's box is also around 1.5 cubic feet which is more inline with the space I have to work with.
Comments, thoughts, suggestions are welcome.